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The X-Files: Perihelion

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A long time X-Files fan here. Happy to report, The X-Files: Perihelion does not disappoint! The story picks up shortly after the 2018 finale. Without spoiling too much, I loved many of the choices Claudia Gray made with characters and plot. Enjoyed this more than the 2018 finale. I honestly didn’t want it to end

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I received an ARC from Netgalley for my unbiased review.

It's a slow starter. I was waiting to jump in and it was a bit of a wade, and that's just about the worst thing I can say about it. It's THAT good.
(Spoilers ahead: Mulder and Scully are gradually finding their ways back to each other, with Scully's new pregnancy, when the FBI calls again. Spoilers done) The X-Files are reopened and there's a bit of a backlog. From that point on our intrepid heros are facing serial killers, disappearing assassins and the remains of the Syndicate.
I highly recommend for nostalgia points, if nothing else, but it's great to see in the days of smartphones and Alexa that the truth is still out there.

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Claudia Gray has fashioned an enjoyable return to X-Files form with a story that leads with poise from the years of lore that have been part of this series. Reading this book was like a warm reunion — complete with creepy X-Files moments.

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If you are a true X-files fan, this book needs to be on your reading list! As a true-fan from day of the X-files, reading this book was bringing me back to two of my favorite characters. This author knows her X-files and the she captured the nuances of the relationship between these beloved characters. I read this book in about a day because I could not put it down. I hope she has plans for what happens next because I am ready to know!

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It's been six years since the most recent season of The X-Files aired, and to say it ended with a whimper rather than a bang would be a bit of an understatement. Ever since, the series has laid dormant. Every so often, rumors swirl of some kind of a reboot, but nothing's materialized yet. But now, Claudia Gray invites readers back into the world of The X-Files with The X-Files: Perihelion, a tense, thrilling mystery that’s sure to entice even the most cynical X-Files fan. Picking up where the most recent season ended, The X-Files: Perihelion continues Mulder and Scully's quest for the truth as they grapple with the realities of their reblossoming relationship and unexpected pregnancy. Put simply, Perihelion makes an excellent case for continuing The X-Files as a series of novels rather than an ongoing television series.

When the FBI asks Fox Mulder and Dana Scully to look into a serial killer targeting pregnant women and another who’s picking off former members of the shadowy Syndicate, their investigation leads them a bit too close to home. For the closer they get to their suspects, the more danger they face. With both killers seeming to possess unusual powers, Mulder and Scully have their work cut out for them. But something feels off about these cases. Some force seems to be connecting them. Somewhere in the shadows, a mysterious cabal lies in wait with a dastardly plan just begging to be enacted. Can Mulder and Scully bring an end to these murders and unravel this strange conspiracy? Or is life on Earth about to change forever? Claudia Gray's The X-Files: Perihelion picks up the pieces from the show's latest season and weaves them into a satisfying, emotionally charged tapestry.

The novel reads like the literary equivalent of an early-series “myth-arc” episode, perfectly balancing Mulder and Scully’s ongoing character arcs with the larger concerns of the series’ mythology. It’s a well-paced, compulsive page-turner that packs a lot of story into a relatively short book. Take the shape of a standard two-part X-Files episode and transform it into prose, and you’ve got a pretty good idea of what to expect from this book. And like those two-parters of old, The X-Files: Perihelion doesn’t really bring any of its larger storylines to a full conclusion. Instead, it mostly sets up avenues that future novels could go down should this outing prove successful. That's not inherently a problem, to be fair. After all, it does feel like Perihelion is a pilot for an ongoing series of X-Files novels. But it's something to be aware of.

Above all else, Perihelion offers a return to form for The X-Files - a good “case of the week” story that gives Mulder and Scully a lot of room to grow emotionally with a sprinkling of the series’ larger mythology mixed in. Going into any of the specifics of Perihelion's plot would do the entire story a great disservice, but let's just say that it feels like the opening story of a theoretical twelfth season. And that approach comes with exactly the strengths and weaknesses you'd imagine.

On the plus side, readers get to revisit Mulder and Scully and see how they're coping with their newly rekindled relationship and newfound pregnancy. And Gray mines that for everything it's worth, making their relationship the real underpinning of the entire novel. At heart, it's a story about Mulder and Scully reconnecting with each other, dealing with their shared trauma, and beginning the rest of their lives. Gray perfectly captures their voices, breathing new life into these characters and pushing them down exciting new pathways.

On the flip side, however, there's the actual meat and potatoes of the plot; the latest attempt to turn The X-Files' long-convoluted mythology into some kind of a coherent narrative. Yet, Gray manages to pull it off about as well as you could expect. Those who hated some of the reveals in the show’s eleventh season probably won’t be won over here. Gray doesn’t retcon or directly undo any of those more controversial elements, but she does manage to reshape them into something far more palatable. And on the horizon rests the promise of even more intriguing storylines. A future that, hopefully, will come to pass.

At the end of the day, Claudia Gray's The X-Files: Perihelion reopens the X-Files with a thrilling, emotionally charged novel that's sure to please even the most skeptical of fans. With an action-packed plot that combines the best elements of the show's mythology with a healthy dose of character development for Mulder and Scully, Perihelion makes an excellent case for the X-Files continuing as an ongoing series of novels. It's not a total homerun; the ending's pretty unresolved and the plot itself feels a bit derivative. But Gray so perfectly captures the essence of Mulder and Scully's relationship that it's hard to imagine someone walking away from this book without even the hint of a smile on their face. There's just so much quintessential X-Files goodness to love here. And Gray's absolute love of the series is so infectious that it's easy to lose yourself in the story she crafts.

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Mulder and Scully are back in a new story that follows the final season of The X-Files show. A killer in the Washington, D.C., area is targeting pregnant women, brutally slaying them and leaving their bodies dissected, while lights and electronics at the murder scenes are blown out as if some major electrical discharge has occurred. Dana Scully is herself surprisingly pregnant, and she and Mulder have moved into a townhouse in the District. Meanwhile, though the Syndicate is no more, a new cabal has risen in its place known as the Inheritors. The group is using an assassin with special abilities to take out former Syndicate members, leaving behind corpses dead by a single knife or gunshot wound, and witnesses seeing nothing but a bit of smoke behind. With the body toll rising on these two cases, the FBI turns to Mulder and Scully, offering them reinstatement and reopening the X-Files. A they prepare for a child in their lives, the pair must decide whom they can trust as they go back to investigating the types of cases that endangered them and those around them so many times before, because Scully may just be the target of not one, but two killers.
This novel certainly was all encompassing of everything that happened during the final two seasons of The X-Files.

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this had that feel that I was looking for from a X-Files novel. It felt like it continued the series perfectly and thought that Mulder and Scully felt like they were the same people that I cared about. It has a great overall story going on and I was invested in what was going on. It had that writing style that I enjoyed from Claudia Gray's previous work. I hope this continues the X-Files universe as I really enjoyed this book.

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Mulder and Scully are back in a new story that follows the final season of The X-Files show. A killer in the Washington, D.C., area is targeting pregnant women, brutally slaying them and leaving their bodies dissected, while lights and electronics at the murder scenes are blown out as if some major electrical discharge has occurred. Dana Scully is herself surprisingly pregnant, and she and Mulder have moved into a townhouse in the District. Meanwhile, though the Syndicate is no more, a new cabal has risen in its place known as the Inheritors. The group is using an assassin with special abilities to take out former Syndicate members, leaving behind corpses dead by a single knife or gunshot wound, and witnesses seeing nothing but a bit of smoke behind. With the body toll rising on these two cases, the FBI turns to Mulder and Scully, offering them reinstatement and reopening the X-Files. A they prepare for a child in their lives, the pair must decide whom they can trust as they go back to investigating the types of cases that endangered them and those around them so many times before, because Scully may just be the target of not one, but two killers.
This novel certainly was all encompassing of everything that happened during the final two seasons of The X-Files. It has everything, from picks up with Mulder and Scully still not completely over the loss of William, a new clandestine faction with a world-changing agenda, the human/alien hybridization plans, Skinner remaining in a coma and even a new "Deep Throat"/"Mr. X" to help steer Mulder along his inquiries. The story encapsulated everything long-time fans of the show have come to expect from such a tale, though I did find the one major aspect towards the end felt way too comic book-y and less X-File-y, and should have been reined in more. But the novel made its mark as a possible beginning to a continued life of The X-Files in book form. 4.5/5*

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Thank you Claudia Grey, Hyperion Avenue and Netgalley for this free ARC in exchange for a review.

This was an exciting novel worthy of the X-Files. It was nice to see what happens after the series and how things are between Mulder and Skully now. We're still left with questions though, and I hope they're answered in more novels.

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It was a wonderful book!
I loved being able to return the the x-files world and the book had twits and things ou never seen coming!

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